The Albanese government has now introduced the toughest federal hate crime laws in Australian history after its revised legislation to combat antisemitism, hate, and extremism passed 116-7 on Tuesday. The laws were introduced in response to the antisemitic terrorist attack at Bondi Beach on December 14, 2025.

To address the spread of hatred and extremism, including antisemitism, the Combatting Antisemitism, Hate, and Extremism (Criminal and Migration Laws) Bill 2026 expands and strengthens Commonwealth criminal offenses.

It does so through increased penalties for hate crime offenses, such as new aggravated penalties for preachers and leaders who advocate or threaten violence, the expansion of prohibited hate symbols offenses, and the creation of a fresh framework to enable organizations that engage in conduct constituting a hate crime to be listed as prohibited hate groups. The bill also establishes stricter rules for the import and possession of firearms.

The final version was slightly amended from a previous draft version, which sparked condemnation over its racial vilification law, which would have made it a criminal offence to promote racial hatred, but which some said would criminalize freedom of speech.

Law includes 'prohibited hate groups'

Nevertheless, laws around inciting racial hatred appear elsewhere, such as in the permission to ban “prohibited hate groups.” In terms of banning a group, a minister must first decide whether there are reasonable grounds to believe the unit has engaged in a hate crime, or has planned or advocated one.

A memorial of pebbles in remembrance to the lives lost during the Bondi Beach mass shooting on December 14, 2025, in Sydney, Australia, January 16, 2026.
A memorial of pebbles in remembrance to the lives lost during the Bondi Beach mass shooting on December 14, 2025, in Sydney, Australia, January 16, 2026. (credit: REUTERS/Jeremy Piper)

A minister must then determine that banning the group is necessary to protect Australians, or at least part of the community, from harm. They must also receive a recommendation to ban the group from the Australian director-general of security.

“The Albanese government has acted swiftly to bolster the safety and security of the Australian community in response to the horrific antisemitic terrorist act at Bondi Beach on December 14, 2025,” said Attorney-General MP Michelle Rowland. “The legislation sends a clear message that those who seek to spread hate and division, including those who seek to radicalize our youth, will be met with appropriate penalties.

“The passing of these laws to combat antisemitism, hate, and extremism is another vital step toward a safer, more unified Australia,” she said.

Still, critics of the bill have highlighted the problems with a minister being responsible for deciding what constitutes a hate crime, whether it has been committed, and whether it should be banned – things the court system typically assesses.

Anti-Israel activists have also expressed anger over the potential that groups or individuals could be punished for saying Israel should not exist, or that Israel is genocidal, so long as it is deemed to be harming Jewish Australians.

Rowland suggested, when asked, that “if those criteria are satisfied, then that is the case,” which some have suggested blurs the line between legitimate protest and hate crime offenses.

Sen. Jacinta Nampijinpa Price called Australian Prime Minister Anthony Albanese out for the “appalling way in which he rammed this shocking bill through the Parliament without proper consideration or scrutiny, and for forcing ill-considered laws on the Australian people.”

“The restriction on firearms is a distraction-by-design. Labor is only seeking to be tough on gun laws because it’s utterly weak in confronting the root causes of antisemitism – in particular, radical Left protesters and Islamist extremists,” Nampijinpa Price said. “The legislation contains a flawed hate crime definition that is incredibly broad in scope.”

“I’m concerned it could be weaponized. And I’m worried about the unforeseen consequences of this legislation and its ramifications for free speech,” she added.

Nampijinpa Price also said she had spoken to multiple Jewish Australians who had issues with the legislation, believing it failed to address what drives antisemitism and would fail to combat it.

In juxtaposition, Executive Council of Australian Jewry president KC Daniel Aghion said the bill was another “substantial step toward achieving effective laws against the deliberate promotion of hatred of groups or individuals based on their skin color or national or ethnic origin.”

“Even though the creation of a criminal offence to that effect was deleted from the bill, a new legal regime has been established to enable the government to proscribe extremist hate groups like Hizb ut-Tahrir and neo-Nazi organizations,” he said.

Aghion pointed out that “no legislation is perfect,” but that it nevertheless represented an achievement, and that the speed of its passage demonstrates that the Parliament can work quickly and decisively when needed.